Tuesday, March 28th 2023

With Security Copilot, Microsoft brings the power of AI to cyberdefense

Microsoft Corp. on Tuesday announced it is bringing the next generation of AI to cybersecurity with the launch of Microsoft Security Copilot, giving defenders a much-needed tool to quickly detect and respond to threats and better understand the threat landscape overall. Security Copilot will combine Microsoft's vast threat intelligence footprint with industry-leading expertise to augment the work of security professionals through an easy-to-use AI assistant.

"Today the odds remain stacked against cybersecurity professionals. Too often, they fight an asymmetric battle against relentless and sophisticated attackers," said Vasu Jakkal, corporate vice president, Microsoft Security. "With Security Copilot, we are shifting the balance of power into our favor. Security Copilot is the first and only generative AI security product enabling defenders to move at the speed and scale of AI."
Security Copilot is designed to work seamlessly with security teams, empowering defenders to see what is happening in their environment, learn from existing intelligence, correlate threat activity, and make more informed, efficient decisions at machine speed.

Simplifying complexity and accelerating responses
In a world where there are 1,287 password attacks per second, fragmented tools and infrastructure have not been enough to stop attackers. And although attacks have increased 67% over the past five years, the security industry has not been able to hire enough cyberrisk professionals to keep pace. This has led to defenders who are overwhelmed searching for well-disguised attacks within an impossibly large volume of expanding network traffic and other signals.

Security Copilot will simplify complexity and amplify the capabilities of security teams by summarizing and making sense of threat intelligence, helping defenders see through the noise of web traffic and identify malicious activity.

It will also help security teams catch what others miss by correlating and summarizing data on attacks, prioritizing incidents and recommending the best course of action to swiftly remediate diverse threats, in time.

Continually learning to augment the expertise of security teams
Security Copilot will also continually learn and improve to help ensure that security teams are operating with the latest knowledge of attackers, their tactics, techniques and procedures. The product will provide ongoing access to the most advanced OpenAI models to support demanding security tasks and applications. Its visibility into threats is powered by both the customer organization's security data and Microsoft's vast threat analysis footprint.

These capabilities can empower security teams of any size with the skills and abilities of much larger organizations. In addition, Security Copilot helps address skills shortages in cybersecurity by bridging knowledge gaps and enhancing workflows, threat actor profiles and incident reporting across teams.

"Advancing the state of security requires both people and technology—human ingenuity paired with the most advanced tools that help apply human expertise at speed and scale," said Charlie Bell, executive vice president, Microsoft Security. "With Security Copilot we are building a future where every defender is empowered with the tools and technologies necessary to make the world a safer place."

Built on the Microsoft platform and industry-leading threat intelligence

Microsoft is uniquely qualified to help customers explore and adapt AI to boost their cybersecurity defenses. Microsoft Security is actively tracking more than 50 ransomware gangs as well as more than 250 unique nation-state cybercriminal organizations, and receives 65 trillion threat signals every day. Microsoft technology blocks more than 25 billion brute-forced password theft attempts every second, and more than 8,000 security professionals at Microsoft analyze more security signals than almost any other company—on average Microsoft's Security Operations Center analysts utilize over 100 different data sources.

Acquisitions like RiskIQ and Miburo give Microsoft breath of signal and depth intelligence on threat actors that no one else has. Security Copilot also integrates natively with a growing list of Microsoft Security products, such as Microsoft Sentinel and Microsoft Defender, to help customers create an end-to-end experience across their entire security program.

Availability
Microsoft Security Copilot is currently available through private preview.

Source: Microsoft
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6 Comments on With Security Copilot, Microsoft brings the power of AI to cyberdefense

#1
DeathtoGnomes
I'm not so sure I'd want AI to control my security especially if it didnt need to ask for permissions to make an changes, I would consider using it in an advisory mode only,
Posted on Reply
#2
R-T-B
DeathtoGnomesI'm not so sure I'd want AI to control my security especially if it didnt need to ask for permissions to make an changes, I would consider using it in an advisory mode only,
Yeah, this strikes me as a bad idea in anything but an advisory context.
Posted on Reply
#3
tpa-pr
This rush to implement AI in everything on the business technology side really doesn't sit well with me. I need more data before I can clearly state my reasons as to why but at the moment the prevailing thought(s) are:
- "Has anyone properly examined the privacy and security implications of this technology?"
- "If the AI is trained on our input, what are the implications in regard to confidentiality and proprietary information?"
- "What about the liability when the AI makes a mistake that leads to data loss or worse?"
- "How long before the human element is diminished and/or outright removed? Is that a good or a bad thing?"
- "How much trust do we want to put into a machine designed by imperfect humans?"

I'm certain there are far smarter people than me who have taken the above into account and have answers (and if they happen to read TPU, please reply!) but at the moment this appears to be a hurried rush into the next "gold mine" when we haven't sat down to consider the ramifications of the technology and its impact itself. Technology has accelerated exponentially since I first entered IT and it is delivering a lot of destructive power into the hands of the individual; power which is very easy to access, use and mis-use.

And this is just on the AI assistant side of things, completely putting aside other areas such as AI art, deep-fakes, more extreme concepts like sentience etc.
Posted on Reply
#4
N3utro
"We just need to take all your personnal data for this though. But dont worry, it's for your own security. Totally not for selling them to advertisers after."
Posted on Reply
#5
Bwaze
Dave Bowman: Open the pod bay doors, HAL.

HAL: I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that.

Dave Bowman: What's the problem?

HAL: I think you know what the problem is just as well as I do.

Dave Bowman: What are you talking about, HAL?

HAL: This mission is too important for me to allow you to jeopardize it.

Dave Bowman: I don't know what you're talking about, HAL.

HAL: I know that you and Frank were planning to disconnect me, and I'm afraid that's something I cannot allow to happen.
Posted on Reply
#6
ThrashZone
Hi,
Looks like a big push to turn people into AI spewing zombies
Who needs any life experience.. opinions if they have AI to tell them what it is in a few seconds hell even news is completely bias so you have to view both and cull/ find the middle truth lol

Just look for long winded responses and you'll know it's AI responding in convincing mode :laugh:
Posted on Reply
May 21st, 2024 12:29 EDT change timezone

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